The next time a public-radio station goes into pledge-drive mode and begs listeners to chip in $100 for those snazzy premiums like the Nina Totin'-Bag, it would be wonderful if, in the spirit of balance and fairness, they would read off some salary numbers for NPR stars. Do people on modest incomes really want to chip in $25 to make sure an anchor can take home $375,000?

Instead, pledge-drive announcers often plead that stations need donations to pay for program fees, not anchor salaries. Blogger and news-app developer Andy Boyle pored over a few IRS 990 forms and revealed some of the highest-paid public radio poobahs:

Boyle added this point on the anchor of the public-radio show Marketplace: "Couldn’t find Kai Ryssdal’s salary in updated 990s for American Public Media."

Boyle had no objection to these high salaries: "So, here’s your general mind-blowing takeaway: Great talent costs money. And I don’t think there’s anything wrong with that. Also, many of the organizations listed showed much more than the required five top salaries, thus adding an extra layer of transparency that isn’t required by law."

What's not transparent is how NPR talks about its salaries on the air. They don't. Donors probably assume that nonprofit broadcasters are living on small-time wages for idealistic reasons. That might be true....if they were compared to network TV stars, but not compared to average Americans.